The emblematic Casa de las Americas, in this capital, invites today to the concert to be given in its premises by the Harvard Jazz Orchestra, United States, under the conduction of Cuban Yosvany Terry.
The evening will be held at the Che Guevara Hall and will mark a new performance here of this group of young non-professionals in a reunion with the Cuban public.
During previous visits to Havana, this musical group has collaborated with national students and prestigious musicians of the island.
Presentations like this one are part of their university academic program, through which they have access to this type of training in an extra-curricular way.
For his part, Cuban conductor and saxophonist Yosvany Terry (Camagüey, 1972), son of the also renowned musician Don Pancho Terry, is linked to the study and interpretation of Jazz and its Cuban roots.
In his continuous trips to his native country he made several recording collaborations and concerts with his father and brother.
Born into a musical family, this artist was trained at the Escuela Nacional de Arte.
In 1995 he began traveling to the United States to join the faculty of the Stanford Jazz Workshop and to tour with his first jazz project, Columna B.
He has lived in the U.S. since 1999 and throughout his career has served at renowned institutions, including Princeton University, the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music, the Brubeck Institute, NYU and Goddard College, according to his resume.
Also Boston University and Casa de las Americas in Havana, as well as the Royal Conservatory of Music in Winnipeg, the Banff Center for Arts and Creativity, Columbia University, the University of Salvador de Bahia and the University of Rio de Janeiro.
In addition, Terry continues in his role as resident instructor at the Stanford Jazz Workshop and recently joined the full-time faculty at Harvard University as tenured and director of jazz ensembles in the Department of Music.
